THE VIEW FROM CHANCERY LANE Michael Frape Law Society Council Member Cambridgeshire & Peterborough
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n a magazine I read, there is a Q&A endpiece where notables are asked a final question: “Are we all doomed?” The question can be considered on various levels. As a lawyer, one can challenge what is meant by “doomed”? And is the question asking the interviewee whether they are “doomed” personally or is it referencing all mankind. Is the question serious or is it mock gallows humour with a nod to Private Frazer’s (of Dad’s Army) catchphrase: “We’re all doomed. Doomed!” I have always believed that the question was serious and angled at whether the subject thought that all humanity was on course to suffer a climate change-induced eco-catastrophe. If I were asked, the answer would be “probably” (on a positive day) or “almost certainly” (on a negative day). I say that on the basis that the task of decarbonising the world economy is monumentally huge and makes dealing with Covid a mere bagatelle. It is also the case that politicians are very good at making grand-sounding pledges, but far better at failing to deliver. Think HS2 for example. Therefore, despite all the good news coming out of COP26, there remains considerable doubt whether the world will actually take the measures necessary to restrain global temperature rises to 1.5˚C, beyond which the planet becomes increasingly hostile to human life. As a commentator said, humankind will either decarbonise the world economy voluntarily by taking the necessary measures, or the planet will do it for us by causing the collapse of civilisation as we know it by 2100.
crisis seriously. TLS finally set up a Climate Change Working Group last year. And the fruits of their labours materialised in September when a climate change resolution was passed by TLS Council. This is the first step on a long journey for both TLS and the legal profession, but hopefully TLS will provide the necessary thought leadership to galvanise change.
But there are small glimmers of hope. Politicians are, at base, only really interested in your vote and winning elections. Therefore the fact that a poll by the ONS in October 2021 confirmed that 75% of adults in Great Britain were concerned about the impact of climate change is encouraging. If voters demand it, the politicians will be forced to deliver. But will they demand it? The second ground for some optimism is that institutions like The Law Society are finally beginning to take the climate
Acknowledging that solicitors have played a crucial role historically in fundamental positive societal changes and can lead in mitigating the climate crisis to avert its worst effects, including by supporting their clients and (for in-house solicitors) their employers in doing so; and
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The Law Society’s Climate Change Resolution Noting that in 2016 the United Kingdom ratified the Paris Agreement to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change to hold the increase in global warming to “well below 2°C”, and to pursue efforts to limit the increase to 1.5°C above pre-industrial levels; Mindful that the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) has confirmed in its 2021 Sixth Assessment Report that “unless there are immediate, rapid and large-scale reductions in greenhouse gas emissions, limiting warming to close to 1.5°C or even 2°C will be beyond reach”; Acknowledging the essential role of the legal profession in strengthening and upholding the rule of law, human rights and access to justice which are vital for society as a whole, including for advancing efforts which mitigate the climate crisis and strengthen climate justice;
Noting the International Bar Association’s Climate Crisis Statement made on 5th May 2020: The Law Society of England and Wales:
1. Resolves to develop plans and take rapid action, in a manner which is consistent with restricting global warming to 1.5°C, by adopting science-based targets. 2. Resolves to: (a) support solicitors to be fully informed on how they might act to mitigate the climate crisis; (b) provide guidance to solicitors on how, when approaching any matter arising in the course of legal practice, to take into account the likely impact of that matter upon the climate crisis in a way which is compatible with their professional duties and the administration of justice; (c) develop, disseminate and publicise educational tools and resources to support solicitors to incorporate into their daily practice advice on the impacts of climate change, and prepare for the likely impacts of climate change upon their daily practice in line with paragraphs 3 and 4 below; (d) engage with current and future climate change-related legislative, regulatory and policy reform so far as it impacts on the practice of law, access to justice and the rule of law; (e) influence the regime governing legal training and education on issues pertaining to climate change; (f) collaborate actively with others for the greatest impact in addressing the climate crisis, including clients, regulators, bar associations, other professional bodies and legal networks focused on ameliorating the climate crisis; and (g) report on the steps taken to meet these commitments and the outcomes of such steps and share its learning with the solicitors’ profession. 3. Urges solicitors, always in a way which is compatible with their professional duties and the administration of justice, to engage in climate conscious legal practice by: (a) continuing legal education on matters pertaining to climate change, in recognition of the pervasive impact of climate change on society and legal practice; (b) approaching any matter arising in the